A National Approach to Pediatric Sepsis Surveillance
- PMID: 31776196
- PMCID: PMC6889946
- DOI: 10.1542/peds.2019-1790
A National Approach to Pediatric Sepsis Surveillance
Abstract
Pediatric sepsis is a major public health concern, and robust surveillance tools are needed to characterize its incidence, outcomes, and trends. The increasing use of electronic health records (EHRs) in the United States creates an opportunity to conduct reliable, pragmatic, and generalizable population-level surveillance using routinely collected clinical data rather than administrative claims or resource-intensive chart review. In 2015, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recruited sepsis investigators and representatives of key professional societies to develop an approach to adult sepsis surveillance using clinical data recorded in EHRs. This led to the creation of the adult sepsis event definition, which was used to estimate the national burden of sepsis in adults and has been adapted into a tool kit to facilitate widespread implementation by hospitals. In July 2018, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention convened a new multidisciplinary pediatric working group to tailor an EHR-based national sepsis surveillance approach to infants and children. Here, we describe the challenges specific to pediatric sepsis surveillance, including evolving clinical definitions of sepsis, accommodation of age-dependent physiologic differences, identifying appropriate EHR markers of infection and organ dysfunction among infants and children, and the need to account for children with medical complexity and the growing regionalization of pediatric care. We propose a preliminary pediatric sepsis event surveillance definition and outline next steps for refining and validating these criteria so that they may be used to estimate the national burden of pediatric sepsis and support site-specific surveillance to complement ongoing initiatives to improve sepsis prevention, recognition, and treatment.
Copyright © 2019 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Conflict of interest statement
POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
References
-
- 70th World Health Assembly. Improving the prevention, diagnosis and clinical management of sepsis. 2017. Available at: http://apps.who.int/gb/ebwha/pdf_files/WHA70/A70_R7-en.pdf?ua=1. Accessed January 24, 2019
-
- Kissoon N, Reinhart K, Daniels R, Machado MFR, Schachter RD, Finfer S. Sepsis in children: global implications of the world health assembly resolution on sepsis. Pediatr Crit Care Med. 2017;18(12):e625–e627 - PubMed
-
- Society of Critical Care Medicine. Surviving Sepsis Campaign. 2019. Available at: www.survivingsepsis.org/Pages/default.aspx. Accessed April 1, 2019
-
- Phillips GS, Osborn TM, Terry KM, Gesten F, Levy MM, Lemeshow S. The New York sepsis severity score: development of a risk-adjusted severity model for sepsis. Crit Care Med. 2018;46(5):674–683 - PubMed
-
- Illinois General Assembly. Public Act 099-0828. 2016. Available at: www.ilga.gov/legislation/publicacts/fulltext.asp?Name=099-0828. Accessed March 5, 2019
